Global Information Lookup Global Information

Megaliths in the Netherlands information


The Borger megalithic tomb (D27) has the longest burial chamber of all megalithic sites in the Netherlands. It is also the first in which a documented excavation took place.

Megalithic architecture appeared in what is now the Netherlands during the Neolithic period, especially in the northeast. Megalithic structures, i.e. buildings made of large upright stones, occur in various forms and functions, mainly as burial sites, temples or menhirs (stones standing alone or in a formation). In the Netherlands, only burial complexes are known. These large stone tombs (Dutch: Hunebedden) were built between 3470 and 3250 BC[1] by members of the Western Group of the Funnelbeaker culture (TBK) and were used until about 2760 BC. After the end of the Funnelbeaker culture in the Late Neolithic, the sites were reused by the Single Grave culture and the Bell Beaker culture during the ensuing Early Bronze Age and, to a lesser extent, into the Middle Ages.

Megaliths in the Netherlands is located in Netherlands
D1
D2
D3+D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
D11
D12
D13
D14
D15
D16
D17+D18
D19+D20
D21+D22
D23
D24
D25
D26
D27
D28
D29
D30
D31
D32
D34
D35
D36+D37
D38–D40
D41
D42
D43
D44
D45
D46
D47
D49
D50
D51
D52
D53
D54
G1
G5
D32a
D32c
D32d
D33
D35a
D37a
D43a
D44a
D52a
D54a
D54b+D54c
G2+G3
G4
O1
O2
U1
class=notpageimage|
Distribution of megalithic tombs in the Netherlands:
preserved; destroyed; questionable attribution

Of the original 100 megalithic tombs in the Netherlands, 54 are still preserved today. Of these, 52 are located in the province of Drenthe. Two more are in the province of Groningen, one of which has been turned into a museum. There is also a site in the province of Utrecht whose classification as a megalithic tomb is uncertain. Destroyed megalithic tombs are also known from the province of Overijssel. Most of the surviving tombs are concentrated on the Hondsrug ridge between the cities of Groningen and Emmen.

The tombs attracted the interest of researchers early on. The first paper was published in 1547. A book published in 1660 by Johan Picardt, who believed that the tombs were the constructions of giants, was widely read. Titia Brongersma carried out the first known excavation of a Dutch megalithic tomb in 1685. In 1734, the first law was passed to protect the tombs, followed by others in the 18th and 19th centuries. In 1846, Leonhardt Johannes Friedrich Janssen published the first nearly complete inventory of the tombs. In 1878, William Collings Lukis and Henry Dryden made the most accurate plans to date of many of the graves. Modern archaeological research on the megalithic tombs was initiated in 1912 by Jan Hendrik Holwerda, who completely excavated two sites. Shortly thereafter, Albert Egges van Giffen began further research. He measured all the sites, carried out numerous other excavations, and had almost all the graves restored by the 1950s. Van Giffen also developed a numbering system for the megalithic tombs that is still used today, with a capital letter for the province and a number ascending from north to south (and a lowercase letter for destroyed sites). Since 1967, there has been a museum in Borger dedicated exclusively to the megalithic tombs and their builders.

The chambers of the tombs were built of granite boulders deposited in the Netherlands during the Ice Age. The gaps between the stones were filled with dry stone made of small stone slabs. The chambers were then covered with earth. Some of the mounds also have a stone fence. Depending on whether the entrance to the chamber is on a long or narrow side, the graves are called dolmens or passage graves. Almost all sites in the Netherlands are passage graves, only one is a dolmen. The graves are similar in their basic structure but vary greatly in size. The length of the chamber ranges from 2.5 m to 20 m. Small chambers were built in all phases of construction, while larger ones were added only in later phases.

Due to the unfavorable preservation conditions, only small amounts of human bones were recovered from the graves. These were mainly cremated remains. Only very limited information is available on the age and sex of the deceased.

In contrast, the grave goods were exceedingly rich. In some graves, thousands of pottery shards were discovered, which could often be reconstructed into hundreds of vessels. Other grave goods included stone tools, jewelry in the form of beads and pendants, animal bones, and, in rare cases, bronze objects. The diverse array of vessel forms and decorations permitted the identification of multiple typological levels, thereby enabling insights to be gleaned about the construction and utilization history of the graves.

  1. ^ Anna L. Brindley: The typochronology of TRB West Group pottery. In: Palaeohistoria. Volume 28, 1986, p. 93–132 (online). JYears corrected according to Moritz Mennenga: Zwischen Elbe und Ems. Die Siedlungen der Trichterbecherkultur in Nordwestdeutschland (= Frühe Monumentalität und soziale Differenzierung. Volume 13). Habelt, Bonn 2017, ISBN 978-3-7749-4118-2, p. 93 (online).

and 27 Related for: Megaliths in the Netherlands information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8325 seconds.)

Megaliths in the Netherlands

Last Update:

Jan Albert Bakker: TRB megalith tombs in the Netherlands. In: Johannes Müller, Martin Hinz, Maria Wunderlich (Ed.): Megaliths – Societies – Landscapes...

Word Count : 12685

Megalith

Last Update:

Astronomical Society, 1978 A Sherratt, "The Genesis of Megaliths". World Archaeology. 1990. (JSTOR) A Thom, "Megaliths and Mathematics". Antiquity, 1966. D...

Word Count : 8000

Locmariaquer megaliths

Last Update:

The Locmariaquer megaliths are a complex of Neolithic constructions in Locmariaquer, Brittany. They comprise the elaborate Er-Grah tumulus passage grave...

Word Count : 648

Dutch East Indies

Last Update:

Independence, Indonesia and the Netherlands made peace in 1949. In the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824, the Dutch ceded the governorate of Dutch Malacca to...

Word Count : 15172

List of megaliths

Last Update:

Rabat Xemxija In the Netherlands megaliths were created with erratics from glaciers in the northeastern part of the country. These megaliths are locally...

Word Count : 1407

Megaliths in the Urals

Last Update:

In recent years, many megaliths have been discovered in the Urals: dolmens, menhirs and a large megalithic cultic complex on Vera Island. At present,...

Word Count : 2401

Passage grave

Last Update:

covered in stone, it is a type of cairn. The building of passage graves was normally carried out with megaliths along with smaller stones. The earliest...

Word Count : 578

Menhir

Last Update:

some 50,000 megaliths once stood in Northern Europe, where almost 10,000 now remain. Menhirs have also been found in many other parts of the world. Many...

Word Count : 1444

Dolmen

Last Update:

consisting of two or more upright megaliths supporting a large flat horizontal capstone or "table". Most date from the Late Neolithic period (4000–3000...

Word Count : 1665

Stone circle

Last Update:

circles in Britain and Ireland. Experts disagree on whether the construction of megaliths in Britain developed independently or was imported from mainland...

Word Count : 1923

Megalithic entrance

Last Update:

again, even after a long time, in order to perform rituals. To that end, the practitioners of Nordic megalith architecture, the Wartberg culture and Horgen...

Word Count : 742

Dolmens of the North Caucasus

Last Update:

similarities with megaliths from different parts of Eurasia, like the Iberian Peninsula, Italy, France, Great Britain, Ireland, Netherlands, Germany, Denmark...

Word Count : 902

Carnac stones

Last Update:

by car The megaliths of Carnac: Dolmen / passage graves – comprehensive list of dolmens in area with photos. The Megalithic Portal and Megalith Map – GPS...

Word Count : 6216

Funnelbeaker culture

Last Update:

The younger TRB in these areas was superseded by the Single Grave culture (EGK) at about 2800 BCE. The north-central European megaliths were built primarily...

Word Count : 4567

Trilithon

Last Update:

Hunebed tombs of the Netherlands. Dolmen Henge Megalithic architectural elements Menhir (standing stone) Stonehenge of the Netherlands Gowland 1902, pp...

Word Count : 250

Barnenez

Last Update:

megaliths, also located in Great West France, it is one of the earliest megalithic monuments in Europe and one of the oldest man-made structures in the...

Word Count : 1096

Rudston Monolith

Last Update:

The Rudston Monolith at over 25 feet (7.6 m) is the tallest megalith (standing stone) in the United Kingdom. It is situated in the churchyard in the village...

Word Count : 435

Avebury

Last Update:

the megaliths lying buried. The survey identified their sizes, the direction in which they are lying, and where they fitted in the circle. During the...

Word Count : 9221

Beltany stone circle

Last Update:

ceremonial masks were fashioned in bronze or even gold. It is in the vaults at the National Museum in Dublin. These megaliths indicate that this landscape...

Word Count : 564

Dolmen of Menga

Last Update:

thirty-two megaliths, the largest weighing about 180 tonnes (200 tons). After completion of the chamber (which probably served as a grave for the ruling families)...

Word Count : 487

List of oldest extant buildings

Last Update:

Spain, a cultural heritage ensemble comprising 3 cultural monuments. "Megaliths in Mecklenburg–Vorpommern". University of Toronto. Retrieved 17 July 2012...

Word Count : 2732

Statue menhir

Last Update:

menhirs in southern France Southern France Megaliths A. Soutou, "La ceinture des statues-menhirs du Haut-Languedoc : essai de datation", in Bulletin...

Word Count : 445

Stone ship

Last Update:

and stern are about 4 m (13 ft) high. There are several other large megaliths in the area. Gettlinge grave field, Öland, Sweden. Hulterstad grave field...

Word Count : 986

Stonehenge

Last Update:

in megaliths, but also in other farmer groups from the fourth millennium BCE, which display similar patterns of uniparental marker diversity ... The high...

Word Count : 14246

Swinside

Last Update:

and articles Dymond, C.W. (1879–81). "A group of Cumberland megaliths". Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society...

Word Count : 1470

Great Pyramid of Giza

Last Update:

section on calculating the weight of megaliths List of tallest freestanding structures List of tallest structures built before the 20th century Pyramidology...

Word Count : 16632

Ballochroy

Last Update:

Ballochroy is a megalithic site in Kintyre on the Argyll peninsula in Scotland. It consists of three vertical stones, side by side, aligned with various...

Word Count : 304

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net